i just read the script online... wow! better than the movie!
I just read the script at
<https://www.scribd.com/document/323754871/Hell-or-High-Water-Aka-Comancheria-Taylor-Sheridan
>
There are scenes and lines of dialogue that were cut out of the film (probably to keep it shorter and more focused on tighter plot advancement).
But for me, these moments give the narrative more resonance and depth to the characters. For instance, there's a scene after Marcus Hamilton retires where he's sitting in his empty house (after his wife died), and the script describes the deteriorating furniture and you can just feel his sense of useless loneliness.
There are other tiny little moments in the script, between the cops, and also between the brothers, which add a sadness and sense of existential futility, which the movie moved through more quickly, and with less emotional inflection.
Also, a few plot points were clarified in more detail. But, overall, the script (while a little longer than the finished film), provided a much more vivid sense of elegiac emptiness, stasis, loneliness, stagnation -- and the feeling that the characters, and their environment had no future (except maybe some oil in the ground).
The narrative in the script gives the audience a chance to see how really trapped are the characters. More description about Hamilton's backstory: his wife died, and he's more scared and lonely about the future, alone.
The mythic-American-Indian subtext seemed more eerie, and the whole Texas environment seemed to be slowly decaying from stagnation and hopelessness.
If you liked the film, I think the script really makes it more haunting and sad.
I realize finished films sometimes need to keep things moving, and chop out little moments, but in this case, I think the entire script should be put back into a director's cut on DVD, etc.
The script itself SHOULD definitely be nominated for Best Original Screenplay -- although maybe they only nominate based on the parts of the script which actually got released in the movie.
There are some pricless descriptions of the characters' thoughts in the script, which got a little glossed-over in the film.
Anyway, if you liked the movie, the script fills in small subtleties which add a dimension of sadness and richness to the sense that nearly all the characters have no future, in a slowly but relentlessly decaying region of American culture.